After managing 50,000+ orders across 30+ countries, we've seen every mistake an importer can make. Here are the 7 most costly ones β and exactly how to avoid each one.
The single most common and most costly mistake. Importers find a supplier on Alibaba, like the price, and place an order without ever verifying who they're dealing with. The result: trading companies posing as factories, outdated equipment, questionable quality systems, or outright fraud.
"I need a blue widget" is not a specification. Vague requirements lead to vague pricing, and vague pricing leads to quality surprises. The factory will build to the cheapest interpretation of your specs β not the one you had in your head.
The classic pattern: samples are perfect, bulk order is a disaster. This happens when there's no structured QC process during production. Factories naturally cut corners when they know nobody is watching. Without in-line inspection, defects compound until the entire batch is compromised.
In China, verbal agreements have little to no legal weight. A handshake and a WeChat message are not contracts. When something goes wrong β and it will β you need a written document that specifies exactly what was agreed upon, with clear quality standards and penalty clauses.
Many first-time importers choose EXW (Ex Works) thinking it's simpler, only to discover they're responsible for everything β factory pickup, export customs, port handling, ocean freight, import customs, and last-mile delivery. Each handoff introduces cost and risk.
Paying 50% or even 100% upfront is common for new relationships β and also common for scams. Once the money is sent, your leverage disappears. Factories may deprioritize your order, cut quality, or simply disappear with your deposit.
Chinese business culture values relationships (guanxi) and avoids direct confrontation. A supplier saying "no problem" often means "I hear you" β not "I understand and will do it." This leads to misaligned expectations, missed deadlines, and quality issues that surface too late.